Ah, I was a tad confused there :)

On Jan 21, 1:12 pm, Vik <v...@mindspring.com> wrote:
> Sorry, I didn't see your reference to the DD_roundies script. I'll
> check it out!
>
> On Jan 21, 10:10 am, Vik <v...@mindspring.com> wrote:
>
> > Thanks very much for this feedback. Yes, Safari and Firefox 3 are
> > easy, because they support that CSS property. The tough thing is to
> > find a solution that works on all major browsers, including IE7, IE6,
> > Firefox 2.  Is there a way to do this yet?
>
> > On Jan 21, 9:41 am, amuhlou <amysch...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > Safari and Firefox have css properties you can use to achieve rounded
> > > corners: -moz-border-radius and -webkit-border-radius, then for IE6
> > > and 7 I use the DD_roundies script:
>
> > >http://dillerdesign.com/experiment/DD_roundies/
>
> > > I made a quick test page to be sure it worked with absolute
> > > positioning and it seems fine.  In your css you would basically say
> > > the width and color of the border and the rounding takes care of it
> > > for you.
>
> > > On Jan 21, 11:18 am, Vik <v...@mindspring.com> wrote:
>
> > > > Has anyone found an approach for curved corners, with borders, on an
> > > > absolutely positioned element, that works on the major browsers?
>
> > > > Thanks very much in advance to all for any info.
>
> > > > Note - I'm trying lots of different approaches to do this. Here's an
> > > > odd case of a demo that works in Mac Firefox 2, but not in Mac Firefox
> > > > 3. Leonardo K. confirmed that when he tries the code on a local
> > > > computer, the corners work as intended; but when he uploads it to a
> > > > web server, the corners stop working correctly in Firefox 3.
>
> > > >http://www.flavorzoom.com/corner_tryout/corners_anomaly.html
>
>

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